Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 19, 1919, Page 14, Image 14
V ; fHE BEE: OMAHA. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1919. 14 South Side NO MERCY SHOWN BOOTLEGGERS IN POLICE COURT . il I mi -. Heavy Fines ' Imposed ' by Judge Foster on Those Who Are Caught Han dling Liquor. An overdose of bootleg whisky comes high on the South Side these days. Police Judge Foster is applying-the screws and instead of the former and customary $10, $15, and 1 $25 fines for drunkenness a $50 fine is now imposed. Three cases of drunkenness and illegal possession were tried before Judge Foster Tuesday morning. In each case a $50 fine was imposed. .1 addition to the $50 fine Tom Lenaghr, 3727 L street, charged with intoxication and reckless driving, was given a 60-day jail sentence on the latter charge. This is the sec ond time that Lenagh had been con victed on the charge of reckless driv &.'. Ed 1 McWilliams stated that he had imbibed too freely of liquor. He was fined $50 and costs. p. 13. Toomey was given a $50 fine " for drunkenness. Cuts His Throat While Talking With Cousin Monday night trouble with his fel low employes at a packing house led .William Gogola, 30 years old, 4522 South Twenty-sixth street, to slasn bis throat, while conversing with his cousin, Anna Kubek.' He is in a serious condition at the South Side hospital. He was attended by Dr. F. O. Beck, who stated that Gogola was in a critical condition. Need for Laborers.. . Laborers are again in great de mand on the South Side. The Federal labor agency is in need of 40 men for construction and sewer ' work. Caretakers for club grounds are also needed. South Side Brevities. Th Omekra B-Xima club met at the So cial Settlement at 7:30 Tuesday nlfrht. Hay, grain and groceries. Try our hen food. Hnnfostuad Grocery. Telephone, South 4038. Will sell cheap, on terras to suit, first yfot from N. K. corner 30th and T streets. ' ' Call In at 4007 So. 34th St. The Ladles' Aid of Wheeler's Memorial T church will meet at the home of Mrs. P. E. Bliss, 2(121 E street, at 2:30 Tuesday' Ifternoon. ' Tho Boy Scouts of Troop No. 33 will (age a benefit show the night of March 25, the funds to be used for the purchase of a scout flag and in the support of a troop basket ball team. The show will be In the Orpheum theater. Twenty-fourth nd 11 streets. A huge bank, consisting of thousands of tons of dirt and manure, gave way Tues- day " morning at Twenty-eighth and- L ttreefs, displacing a 70-ton steam shovel, moving It several feet. The bank has glv n way several times. i, COLOR. By Bonnie E. Snow and Hugo B. Froellch. The Prang Company. The authors have compiled "The ory, and Practice of Color" for the purpose of discovering to the ordi nary man the world of color. The charts are the keys that unlock a vast storehouse of much needed knowl edge. V . Mi 1 i h1 i A km kt V" TV.'' 11 t' Art -SI T" -J Pi r A i I ; . . iNew President of Post A Travelers' Association Named 1 ,ZttctenZ Carp Lucien L. Carr, United States Supply company, was elected pres ident of Post A, Nebraska Travel ers' Protective association, at the an nual meeting. He succeeds J. H. Stine. B. R. T. Official Acquitted of Manslaughter Charge Mineola, N. Y., March 18. Thomas F. Blewitt," division super intendent of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit company, was acquitted by a jury here tonight of a charge of manslaughter growing out of the wreck of the Brooklyn-Brighton line last November in which 98 persons were killed. The indictment on which Blewitt was tried charged that he had been guilty of "culpable negligence" in placing Anthony Lewis, a "green" motorman, in charge of the train which was wrecked. Timothy S. Williams, president of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit com pany, and several other officials are awaiting trial on indictments charg ing them with manslaughter in con nection with; the wreck. f Soldiers' Insurance Policies Convertible Into New Forms Washington, March 18. Secretary Glass today approved regulations governing conversion of soldiers' and sailors' war-time insurance to "standard forms of government life insurance. The policies will be ready for issuance soon and the work of issuing Slid maintaining the policies is expected to make the war risk bu reau the largest life insurance agency in the world. France to Get Railroads and Docks at a Bargain Paris, March 18. Docks, railroads, warehouses,1 hospitals and barracks built by the American expeditionary forces, to the value of $165,000,000, will be sold to France for the best figures the American liquidation commission can obtain. None of these can readily or profitably be removed, an the only alternative is to sell at the best bargin. Srcfaxlc Saktttg Ctmtfrang xcurib $rfrttttrrd M isssaH - icuiuvcu, dim luc uiuy ancuiauvc to i. ... ..... to Sell at the DCSt Dargin. Chronicle-Telegraph. KXyu -LulskJ ayc uuU POLICE ALLEGE HOLD-UP FAKED TO ROB ANOTHER Letter from Guest in Next Room Tells of How Hastings and Bond Planned Deal. Albert Hastings and Ira Bond, two Omaha real estate traders, are being' sought by Omaha police for complicity in an alleged "fake" hold up staged Sunday night in the Har ney hotel. Hastings reported to the police that himself, Bond and George Woods, Council Bluffs, had been robbed at 9 o'clock Sunday night in Hastings' hotel room. He said the two robbers, men who had called ostensibly to negotiate a land deal, had taken $46 from him, $19 from Bond and an unknown amount from Woods. Alleged Hold-Up.. Police allege that the holdup was a frameup to rob Woods. In sup port of tbeir charges they produce a letter from a guest at the Harney hotel, who occupied a room adjoin ing Hastings. The police withhold the identity of the writer of the letter. It relates a conversation supposed to have been held by Hastings and Bond in which the holdup was plan ned. The two voices, the writer of the letter said, mentioned that Woods always had $1,000 or more in . his pocketbook. Bond and"Hastings were recently tried in police court on a charge of having swindled Sam Joe, former Omaha restaurant keeper, of" a val uable Omaha apartment bwffding. The case was tried about, 10 days ago and was featured by allegations of blackmail from both sides. Joe admitted that he had been influenced by others to file the charges against Bond and Hastings. The letter referring to the alleged "fake" hold-up received by the po lice reads as follows: "This man Hastings, and this man Bond the short fellow fram ed this holdup themselves, as I heard them talking through the door in the next room. "They said: 'Now, this fellow Woods has got about $1,000 on him and he don't drink and we will have to get this money.' t " 'Well,' one of them said, I think it was Hastings, the big fellow, 'We will frame a holdup.' "So they called up a number like Douglas 3631 (Orpheum Garden) and asked if Pete was there and said, 'Can I. see you right away,' "So then they went out and -in about two hours four men came in and went to Hastings' room." The 1 balance of the letter police have suppressed. Nothing has been learned of the identity of "Woods" other than that he lives at Coupcil Bluffs. He failed to report his loss to police. Hastings checked out of the Har ney hotel Monday morning. Silence at Last. A certain gentleman objected Very much to being talked to by his barber while be was' being shaved. He had not thought of any way of curing his talkative bar ber, when one day a brilliant opportunity arose. The barber asked him If he could feel the razor on his face. "My dear man," replied the gentleman. "If you hadn't mentioned It just now I should never have known there was a razor on my face." "Thank you, sir!" beamed the barber. The gentleman, continuing: "I thought you were usfng a file." Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. mm m. MSB1 3 m I No Powder or Waists Cry, Upsets Women Omaha's Out of High School Set Not Quite in Accord With Miss Towne's Statement That Morale of Girls Suffers if They See Elders Wearing Nice, Thin, Cool Waist and Helping the Complexion a Little, j Poor "we-uns" who are over 161 We can't powder our nose, with any fluffy white powder puff, we can't wear dainty georgette waists either dark or light summer or winter we can't venture a stray glance at complexion that comes in a little round box we can't follow Dame Fashion and wear "in at the feet" dresses . We can't do any of these thjngs according to the letter of the state ment made by Miss Jesse Towne, dean of the girls in Central High school -at a meeting of a woman's club. 1 We can't do any of these things because if we do some little miss in high schol will follow our habits and will powder her 16-year-old nose and will adopt slimsy georgette waists aid even attempt a complex ion other than her own. V Their Favorite Attacked. This statement brought a storm of protest yesterday from Omaha wom en they were alarmed to see fashion's favorite tlje georgette waist attacked. ' - ' What can we do and what can we wear?" they asked. And just to find out, a reporter asked that same question of Miss Towne, between classes at the Cen tral High. "I. don't attempt to criticise or dictate to Omaha women alone," said Miss Towne, "but there are street clothes and there are those waists which appear on the street which the high school girls are de termined to imitate in the extreme. "I am glad to say that the majori ty of our girls now dress simply look in the halls and see them in their sweaters, middies, one-piece dresses but these diminish with ev ery georgette fad." So that must be the option left us! Mayhap Farnam street may soon see Miss Twenty and .Thirty or Forty-year-old trip down town, dressed in her middy, sweater, sim ple one-piece dress-for he- salary may not warrant war-time serge and jersey. Miss Sixteen-year-old may laugh King Albert Tore Up Scrap of Paper Containing Bribe of Former Kaiser Wilhelm When Outlook For Allied Cause Looked Gloomiest, the Ex-Raiser Offered King of the Belgians Restora tion of His Country and Part of Northern France. By ROBERT WELLES RITCHIE. (Universal Service Staff Correspondent.) Paris, March l.--(By Mail.) When the peace commis sioners representing Belgium table of the nations, among world there gathered, none will have a better right to de clare, "We have kept the faith." And there is a story that lies behind this right to boast of a clean heart. I have rea son to believe it never has been published hitherto because of the strict censorship enforced by all the warring nations and only recently abated somewhat. As it came to me in Belgium from two different sources both official I give it to you, using only the discretion of concealing two names, the publication of which at this moment might work an in justice. Last May after the scandal" of the Empress Zita's letter to her brother in Belgium had blown over and when, as you will remember, Ger many's great drives toward the heart of France were in full swing, Kaiser Rill made one more move to detach one of the allies from the entente. He wrote a personal letter to King Albert of Belgium wherein he pledged as reward of a separate peace to cut a slice from northern France, including the cities of Lille, Armentieres and Dunkirk and add this territory to Albert's domain. The letter also promised full repar ation to Belgium for all damage done during the invasion, and per manent protection of the- kingdom against, any efforts at revenge the French or English might make. Entrusted to Diplomat. This letter was entrusted to a German diplomat who at one time had represented the empire at Brus sels. From Switzerland this emis sary of evil managed to get word of his desire for a meeting through to a certain Baron X, who held a po sition of confidence in Albert's ex iled government at Harve. Now, the baron was not a traitor, he simply was indiscreet even those who condemn him most do not go further in their judgment. Baron X went to Switzerland, met the former German diplomat, who once had been a close intimate sof his before the war, and received from him the autographed letter from Wilhelm to Albert. Whether or not Baron X was ful ly informed as to the contents of that letter is not known; the kind est thing to believe is that he was not. He took the letter to King Al bert, then living in a cottage at La Panne, in that pitifully narrow strip of his kingdom not oevrrun by Ger man hordes. Hun Triumph Seemed Assured. Consider the problem that letter from Wilhelm, placed before the king of the Belgians. This was in May; the British Fifth army already had .broken and the British lines pushed far back in the March drive; farther east the French had suffered a great reverse, and from the forest of St. Gobain the great gun was bombarding Paris; the al lies were in straits which have not been fully admitted to this day. A German triumph seemed assured. And here was an opportunity -to make ' peace not with honor, but with profit perhaps the only peace with profit any of the allies would be able to secure. Tore Letter to Bits. The exiled king of the Belgians read the letter from Wilhelm and tore it into bits. Then he summoned the bearer of that letter before him. What passed between the two is Georgette and giggle, but she will not be en dangered by such an example! "But isn't there any distinction between what a 16-year-old high school girl and -a woman can wear?" she was asked. No Difference in U. S. "You could hardly say that there could be in America, could you?" answered Miss lowne. "Isn't there some things that.com pensate for not being able to gig gle and laugh and crowd in street cars, and wear flying colors at a base ball game, like'high schoolers?" 1 hat doesn t apply to georgette waists worn -by women and girls 'enough older to, be the ideal of the high school lass," answered Miss Towne. So women continue to ponder and oonder whether they may find an island off and away where only these above this dead line age may gather and dress, and wear georgette and have complexions without con taminating those younger. "It's true as I said at the Wo man's club," she continued, "that until women distinguish between things proper for the street, such as suits and general street clothes and these thin georgette waists that per fectly respectable women wear, I cannot teach girls that they should hot wear them, j Blame Falls Upon Elders. "There is a street style that needs no explanation, but perhaps I've said too much now, but you can't criticize girls without critizing those whom they imitate." So we poor out of High school people can't wear middies and sweat ers like unto them; we can't hae even one little pink spot to help out our own; we can't wear frilly, thin waists lest we harm our youthful imitators guess we'll just have to amend Dr. Osier's decision and plan to chloroform all above High school age lest by our acts they are influ enced! At least that is the only way out if Miss Towne's advice is taken literally, according to the women of fashion in Omaha. and its king came to the peace all the plenipotentiaries of the not known, but soon it became known around the government bu reaus that ior reasons of health the Baron X had resigned his post and retired to Nice. There, at lastreporrs, he still is a broken man, whose great mistake hd been that he was the bearer of a bribe to Albert, the king of the Belgians. Rotary Officers Adopt Reconstruction Program Chicago, March 18. A reconstruc tion program was adopted by the two-day conference of international' officers of the International Rotary association, who adjourned' today. Resolutions adopted called for aid in obtaining better housing, wages and employment for returning sol diers and sailors, support of federal employment, vocational and indus trial education and for military and nhysicaltraining, as well as organiza tion of clubs in European countries other "than where English is spoken. No Place For Craps. LieutT.eon Cadore, Brooklyn base ball club pitcher, who was with the negro fighters of New York's old 16th regiment in France, told this story when he arrived home. One day a German high explosive shell hit French soil about ten feet from a six foot negro private, but proved to be a dud. The negro, waiting and expecting the shell to explode, reached Into his pocket, drew forth a pair of dice, threw them on the ground and exclaimed: "After this. Ah leads a different life." New York World. Our.Impro.ve3 Process A! Bee Hive Cleaners & Dyers 1941-43 Vinton Street. Prominent Omahan,' to Go to Siberia - . . - - ' $ Dr. F. A. Sedlacek. An Omaha surgeon, "Drs F. A. Sedlacek, will accompany the Ameri can Red Cross mission to Serbia. Dr. Sedlacek, who is a leader in the local Bohemian communityand a member of the state prison and pa role board, leaves Thursday morning for San Francisco, , from whence the mission sai's March 25. Col. C. H. Connor of Washington, heads the mission which includes 30 surgeons, 50 nurses and 75 attend ants and clerks. The party goes by way of Honolulu, Kobe, Japan, Port Arthur, Manchuria, and thence to Vladivostok. Dr. Sedlacek will be gone one year. Governor McKelvie granted him leave of absence from the prison board. His wife, Anna, and daugh ter, Zdenka, a senior in Central high school, remain here. Dr. Sed lacek has practiced 22 years in Ne braska, 10 years in Omaha. He's So Honest They Might , Have Sent on the Money Mr. Fisher Garner, a colored gjen- telman, is wanted for manslaughter in Magnolia, Pike county, Miss. But Mr. Garner knows the deputy sher iff down there and is friendly to ward the county. Wherefore this letter, addressecF to Joseph Quinn, deputy of Pike county, and dated february lo: Dear Friend Joe I takes my pen n hand to write you a few lines and I hope they will find you in salu brious health and prosperity. Now, Joe, I want you to do me a" favor. I want you to send me a ticket for the money to pay my railroad fare back to Magnolia. It was dead wrong for me to skip out, so if you will send me a ticket I'll come back on the first train. Be fure and send the ticket. I don't want to make a big expense for Pike couty to bring me back." , Mr. Garner gave his Chicago ad dress as 4553 South State street. His letter came back with one from the Mississippi sheriff last night, and Fisher was taken at that ad dress. At tne Dureau ne was sun sorrowing that Pike county should 1 spend so much to get him back You see, Deputy Joe Quinn is on his way to keep Mr. Garner com pany on his return trip to dear Magnolia, Thirty Days Makes Them Both Happy Again New York, "I'm going to make you both happy," said Magistrate Koenig to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph O'Brien, who appeared before him in the west side court. Mrs. O'Brien said Jier husband had thrown coffee potsvand plates at her. "I'm going to give you 30 days in jail," said the magistrate to O'Brien. "I think that will make your wife happy." "How's that going to make me happy?" asked O'Brien. "O, you ought to be happy trf think that it's not six months," was the court's reply. ALL VICTIMS OF ECZEMA'S ITCH NEED POSLAM It is Pcslam's misBion to relieve itciing eczema's cruel distress and to restore the disordered skin to sightliness and health. Comfort comes as soon as it is applied to the sore places. Its concentrated healin? power quickly shows. Each day should mark distinct improvement. So effective is Poslam for eczema, rashes, pimples, scalp-scale that just a little of it will do much. It's quality that counts. Sold everywhere. For free sample write to Emergency Laboratories, 213 West 47th St., New York City. Urge your skin to become fresher, clearer, better by the daily use of Poslam Soap, medicated with Poslam. Adv. of dry cleaning preserves the most delicate laces, chiffons, silks, linens, woolens as well as coarser materials. You need not be afraid of sending your goods to us for cleansing. We will tell you before hand if hey can be thor oughly and safely cleaned by our extra careful pro cess. Yorr take no risk and save money. Just phone Red 3739 and'; our car will call Phone Red 3739. BUILDERS DO NOT AGREE ON A FIXED MATERIAL PRICE r President of Chicago Lumber Co. Favors Meeting to Set Omaha Building Pro gram in Operation. Building tradesmen disagree on the wisdom of holding a meeting to set the lowest plane' of prices on building materials. Moshier G. Colpetzer, president of the Chicago Lumber company, who advocates such a meeting in or der to set Omaha's building program in operation, Monday interviewed half a dozen leaders in the building industry, with scant success. "They are not very enthusiastic about.it," said Mr. Colpetzer. "We cannot get any unanimity of opinion on the advisability of hold ing such a meeting," s1d VV. W. Car michael of Dietz Lumber company. A slight decrease in the profit on lumber would not have much effect on the building program in Omaha, according to Mr. Carmichael. Mere Small Decrease. "It wouldn't be a big enough de less all the building trades made a concerted effort to reduce their pro fits, it wouldn't affeci the amount of building at all," he said. "We don't look for any decided slump in prices. Any readjustment of prices will have to come grad ually, we have no reason to be lieve there will be any large or im portant decline in prices soon; the situation today is the same as it was two months ago. Therefore some of the building material men see no necessity tor holding the meeting. Both men said they had not given up the idea of a ''local readjustment congress" and would continue to push the matter the best they could. Meanwhile realtors continue their assertions that they cannot afford to build in Omaha at the present cost of lumber and other materials. Overcame the Difficulty. A little girl was sent by ker mother to the grocer's with a bottle for a quart of vinegar. "But, mamma," said the little one, "1 can't say that word." "But you must try," said the mother, "for I must have vinegar and there's no one else to send." So the little girl went with the bottle, and as she reached the counter of the store she pulled the cork out of the bottle with' a pop and said to the astonished shopman: "There Smell that and give me quart!" Pearson's Weekly. MRS. GEO. BLAIR SUFFERED FOR 14 LONG YEARS In Good Health As Ever In Her Life Since Taking Tanlac Gains 14 Pounds. You may not believe me when I tell you that I would not exchange fu. nnA ...ui, T cin inrr Tanfac f f. w . . Tanlac for the biggest gold mine in the world, but it is true just the same," said Mrs. George Blair, who lives on Route No. 5, Peoria, 111., while talking to a Tanlac representa tive the other day. "About fourteen years ago," she continued, "my health broke down all at once, and when I think of all the suffering I have gone through with since that time, I really won der that I am alive today. During all that time I never knew what it was to eat a meal without suffering terribly with indigestion afterwards. My stomach was in such bad condi tion that even just a few bites of any kind of food would sour and cause gas to form. I couldn't eat enough to hold my strength, and I just gradually went down hill' until I was so thin and weak that I was hardly able to get about at all. Then, too, my kidneys bothered me a great deal, and I simply can't describe' the awful pains I had in the small of my back, and when I would sit down or lie down it was very difficult for me to get up again. My nerves were in such bad condition that the least little noise would startle me and give me a severe nervous headache which would often put me in bed for a whole day. - "When I began taking Tanlac my health was just about as poor as it could be, but I am thankful to say that everything is quite different with me now. Why, by the time I had finished my first bottle of Tan lac I felt better than I had for years, and I kept on improving un til I had gotten rid of every one of my troubles. The good that Tan lac has done me is almost unbeliev able, but it is really true that I am in as good health now as I ever was in my life. All that stomach trou ble is a thing of the past, and it is just grand to be free of those awful pains in my back. I never had such an appetite, and everything I sat agrees with me perfectly, and I have actually gained fourteen pounds in weight. I just feel fine all the time, and my nerves are in such perfect condition that I sleep well every night. I honestly believe that there are many nights I sleep so sound that I don't even turn over in bed, and I feed so rested and refreshed when I get up in the mornings. We are great believers in Tanlac at our house and never lose an opportunity to speak a good word for it." Tanlac is sold in Omaha by all Sherman & McConnell Drug Com pany's stores, Harvard Pharmacy and West End Pharmacy. Also For rest and Meaney i)rug Company in South Omaha and the leading drug gist in eacl city and town through out the state of Nebraska. Adv. OTHERS Reduce your doctor's bills by keeping always on hand 'AP0RU1 r-arouR bodyguard" - zof. to. uo mi COLDS! I'll! For Headache Grippe Influenza Chills Neuralgia Pain "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" are being universally used in place of quinine because they offer prompt relief without dis comfort or distress. Adults can take one or two "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" with water. If necessary, take three times a day, after meals. The "Bayer Cross" on each tablet, means the genuine. "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." "Proved Safe by AJillions." 20-oenfc package Larger sizes. The original woTld-famous tablets. Owned by Americans Entirely I Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayrr Manufac ture of Moiioaccticacideter of Salicylitacid Women Need Swamp-Bool Thousands of women have kidney and bladder trouble and never sus pect it. Women's complaints often provo to be nothing else but kidney trou ble, or the result of kidney or blad der disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition, they may cause the other organs to become dis eased. Pain in the back, headache, loss of ambition, nervousness, are often times symptoms of kidney trouble. Don't delay starting treatment. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a physi cian's prescription, obtained at any irug store, may be just the remedy needed to overcome such conditions. Get a medium or large size bot tle immediately from any drug store. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten ents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing hamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention The Omaha Daily Bee. Adv. Says Poisons Cause Headache Dizziness Coated Tongue and Myriad Ail ments in the Spring. Grandma's Remedy Now Sold in Tablet Sulpherb Tablet. Many men, women and children need a Spring Blood Purifier. Tho blood becomes thick with poisons through the winter months. When spring comes serious ailments like typhoid, scarlet fever, coughs, colds, catarrh, neuralgia, rheumatic pains, loss of appetite and a sluggish all-in feeling prevails. The bowels, the liver and the kid neys need help. The blood needs thinning and purifying if pimples, and boils are present. Sulpherb Tab lets quickly relieve constipation af kidney inactivity arid elimination of poisons takes place and you are made strong and fit for spring and summer. Grandma gave sulphur and cream of tartar in molasses. Now you take them in tablets with lax ative purifying herbs a better med icine, easy and pleasant to take. Druggists sell them in 60c sealed tubes. Every package guaranteed satisfactory or money back. Get Slupherb Tablets (not sulphur tab lets.) Adv. HEAD STUFFED FROM J CATARRH OR A C0LDJ Says Cream Applied in Nostrils Opens Air Passages Kight Up. j .. --.. . .. .. A - -- - -- .- -- - - -- .- Instant relief no waiting. Youi clogged nostrils open right up; th air passages of your head clear and you can breathe freely No mor hawking, snuffling, blowing, head ache, dryness. No struggling foi breath at night; your cold or catarrh disappear. Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Ap ply a litfle of this fragrant, anti septici healing cream in your nos trils. It penetrates through every air passage of the head, soothes the inflamed or swollen mucous mem brane and relief comes instantly. It's just fine. Don't stay stuffed up with a cold or nasty catarrh. Adv. ACIDITY is at the bottom of most digestive ills. KM10ID5 FOR INDIGESTION afford pleasing and prompt relief from the distress of acid dyspepsia. MADE BY 5C0TT tc B0WNE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION XL